• Onno (VK6FLAB)
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    7 months ago

    X (twitter) is a signatory to the Christchurch Call set-up by Jacinda Ardern. Signatories agree among other things to suppress the dissemination of terrorism. Nobody is talking about this.

    Signatories: https://www.christchurchcall.com/our-community

    I checked the Christchurch Call website which clearly shows Xitter as a member of the community that agreed to:

    “Take transparent, specific measures seeking to prevent the upload of terrorist and violent extremist content and to prevent its dissemination on social media and similar content-sharing services, including its immediate and permanent removal, without prejudice to law enforcement and user appeals requirements, in a manner consistent with human rights and fundamental freedoms. Cooperative measures to achieve these outcomes may include technology development, the expansion and use of shared databases of hashes and URLs, and effective notice and takedown procedures.”

    Full text: https://www.christchurchcall.com/about/christchurch-call-text

    • @[email protected]
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      27 months ago

      I think the argument is more about how the Australian Government went about and given coalition (Australia’s right party) are supporting the Government on this I’m wary, not that I care about Xitter.

      Of course it’s equally likely that neither party is aware of the Christchurch Call or the fact that Xitter is a signatory.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    27 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Elon Musk lashed out at Australia’s prime minister on Tuesday after a court ordered his social media company X to take down footage of an alleged terrorist attack in Sydney, and said the ruling meant any country could control “the entire internet.”

    At a hearing overnight, Australia’s Federal Court ordered X, formerly called Twitter, to temporarily hide posts showing video of the incident earlier this month, in which a teenager was charged with terrorism for knifing an Assyrian priest and others.

    The billionaire, who bought X in 2022 with a declared mission to save free speech, although some groups have suggested that harmful content has increased on the site, leading some advertisers to flee.

    A spokesperson for e-safety commissioner Julie Inman Grant said the takedown notice was for the attack footage only, and not for “commentary, public debate or other posts about this event, even those which may link to extreme violent content.”

    On Tuesday, Facebook and Instagram owner Meta said it had used “internal tools” to detect and block copies of videos of the church attack and an unrelated, deadly stabbing at a shopping mall in Sydney two days earlier.

    Alice Dawkins, executive director of internet policy non-profit Reset.Tech Australia, said Musk’s comments fit “the company’s chaotic and negligent approach to the most basic user safety considerations that under previous leadership, the platform used to take seriously.”


    The original article contains 584 words, the summary contains 227 words. Saved 61%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!